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Welwyn North railway station

Coordinates:51°49′26″N0°11′31″W / 51.824°N 0.192°W /51.824; -0.192
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Railway station in Hertfordshire, England

Welwyn North
National Rail
Platform 1
General information
LocationDigswell,Welwyn Hatfield
England
Grid referenceTL247154
Managed byGreat Northern
Platforms2
Other information
Station codeWLW
ClassificationDfT category E
Key dates
1850Station opened byGNR as "Welwyn Station"
1926Station renamed "Welwyn North"
Passengers
2019/20Decrease 0.568 million
2020/21Decrease 89,414
2021/22Increase 0.275 million
2022/23Increase 0.367 million
2023/24Increase 0.368 million
Notes
Passenger statistics from theOffice of Rail and Road

Welwyn North railway station serves the villages ofDigswell andWelwyn inHertfordshire,England. The station is located 22 miles (35 km) north ofLondon King's Cross, on theEast Coast Main Line. Train services are currently provided byGreat Northern.

Location

[edit]

Although the station is north ofWelwyn Garden City, the village ofWelwyn is about 1 mile (1.6 km) west in the modern district ofDigswell, which in 1865 was known as High Welwyn and is shown on maps of that period. It is still called High Welwyn as Digswell Parish was dissolved in 1926 when it became absorbed into Welwyn Garden City. Just to the south of the station the line passes over theDigswell Viaduct, and to the north through two tunnels. This section (between Digswell Junction[1] to the south of the viaduct and Woolmer Green) is a significant bottleneck where four lines are reduced to two.

History

[edit]
Welwyn viaduct
Welwyn Tunnel Portal

Construction of the station and viaduct began in 1848 and the line was opened in 1850 as part of theGreat Northern Railway. It was called Welwyn Station until 1926, when it was renamed following the opening of a new station forWelwyn Garden City. It was built by contractorThomas Brassey out of red brick produced locally from the Welwyn Brick Fields at Ayot Green.

The viaduct is built on floating foundations as the bed of the Mimram Valley was not stable enough for normal ones. These floats consisted of timber beams filled with burned chalk onto which the towers were built. The tunnels were hand-dug by the thousands of manual workers, mainly Irish, for whom a new tented village was built centred on the Cowper Arms, itself built to stop the workers descending on the taverns in Welwyn. The viaduct lay midway between Welwyn Junction (the sign still remains), which was the point at which the main line was crossed by the Hertford to Luton line, and High Welwyn, where the station is located.

TheWelwyn Tunnel rail crash occurred in 1866 in the longer of the two tunnels to the north of the station.

In its heyday the station served local agriculture as well as passenger traffic. There was a goods yard and goods shed on the west side and sidings to the north and south. These included an impressive set ofcoal drops and, from 1884, a private siding for the adjacent beehive works (E. H. Taylor Ltd. from 1900). The complex included three railway worker's cottages on the west (down) side and two on the east (up). Much of the land to build the station was purchased from local landownerGeorge Augustus 6th Earl Cowper, who built the Railway Inn (later renamed the Cowper Arms Hotel) on land adjoining to the west. This is contemporary with the station and built in the same red brick, reputedly by the samenavvies (who went on to frequent it).

Welwyn North Station's Platform 1, 2015

Today the goods yard has made way for a car park but the main station building, the worker's cottages and the Cowper Arms remain.

The station is a rare survival of architecture from the early days of the GNR and this is now recognised withlisted building status. The main station building, the remaining portion of the footbridge and the tunnel portal to the north are all Grade II listed, whileWelwyn Viaduct to the south is Grade II* listed.[2]

Services

[edit]

All services at Welwyn North are operated byGreat Northern usingClass 387EMUs.

The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[3]

During the peak hours, all services are extended beyond Letchworth Garden City to Cambridge. On Sundays, the station is served by an hourly service between London King's Cross and Cambridge.

Preceding stationNational RailNational RailFollowing station
Great Northern

References

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  1. ^London North Eastern Route Sectional Appendix; LOR LN125 Seq001 to 005. Network Rail.
  2. ^"WELWYN RAILWAY VIADUCT, Welwyn - 1348122 | Historic England".
  3. ^Table 24, 25National Rail timetable, May 2023
  • Welwyn's Railways: A History of the Great Northern Line, 1850–1986, Tom W. Gladwin, Peter W. Neville, Douglas E. White, The Book Castle (November 1986)
  • History of Welwyn by Gordon Longmead

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toWelwyn North railway station.

51°49′26″N0°11′31″W / 51.824°N 0.192°W /51.824; -0.192

East Coast Main Line
(main route)
Northern City Line
Hertford loop line
Peterborough Line
Cambridge line
Train operating company
Former operators
Closed line
Closed stations
Infrastructure
Railway stations inHertfordshire
Abbey line
East Coast Main Line
Hertford East branch line
Hertford Loop Line
Cambridge line
Lea Valley lines
Cheshunt via Southbury
Hertford East via Tottenham Hale
London–Aylesbury line
Thameslink
Watford DC line
West Anglia Main Line
West Coast Main Line
Thameslink and Great Northern routes serving this station
Great Northern
Peterborough & Cambridge
Stations in italics are served on limited occasions, at peak hours or on Sundays only.
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